
CLEVELAND — Former Sen. Sherrod Brown, D-Ohio, launched a comeback campaign Monday, setting the stage for a 2026 special election that could decide partisan control of the Senate. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading. Brown will challenge Sen. Jon Husted, the Republican whom Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine appointed this year to fill the vacancy created by JD Vance’s election as vice president.
Main Idea: Former Sen. Sherrod Brown launched a bid for Ohio’s U.S. Senate seat in 2026, setting up a race against Sen. Jon Husted that could affect control of the chamber.
Key Points:
The Ohio Senate race could shape federal taxes, health care, and worker protections for households nationwide, with possible cuts to Medicaid and other safety net programs if Republicans keep control.
A tight race could give voters a stronger choice on jobs, benefits, and spending, and Brown says he would fight for workers and Social Security.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Brown’s main opponent and a central actor in the special election for Ohio’s Senate seat.
Central figure in the article; launches his comeback campaign and is the main subject of the Senate race.
His appointment of Jon Husted to the Senate vacancy is a key event shaping the race.
The vacancy being filled is tied to his election as vice president, making him part of the core.
Described as lobbying Brown to run for Senate; important background actor but not the main focus.
Co-signs a statement backing Brown’s bid as DSCC chair, a supporting political role.
Mentioned as the Republican who defeated Brown last year, providing electoral context.
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Sign in to commentNamed political committee whose chair supported Brown’s candidacy.
Brown launched this nonprofit after leaving office; secondary but named organization tied to his post-Senate activity.
Mentioned because he carried Ohio and backed the megabill Brown criticizes; contextual, not central.